“No one sews a patch
of unshrunk cloth on
an old garment, for
the patch will pull
away from the
garment,
making the tear
worse.”
Matthew 9:16 (NIV)
Growing up in a
family of five kids, new tennis shoes were a rare and priceless gift. One pair
of shoes was expected to last an entire school year plus one summer. We really
didn’t mind; we knew that it was hard for our parents to raise a family whose
income depended on farming. Hand me down clothes and shoes were the norm. The
oldest sibling really had it the best.
For example, she
got the new pair of tennis shoes and as she outgrew them, the next one in line
inherited them – no matter what shape they were in. That didn’t keep us from
dreaming about having a new pair of shoes – or at least a different pair minus
the holes.
One day my
sister Patty and I were sitting on the porch step, looking at our wiggling toes
poking through the holes in our tennis shoes. Surely there was something we
could do, we reasoned, to fix our problem. Suddenly Patty thought of a great
plan: why not patch the holes in our worn out tennis shoes?
She excitedly
told me that the day before she had found some material that had never been
used, tucked away in a basket. Why not cut little squares from it, she said,
and sew them over the holes in the shoes?
We were so
excited at her stroke of genius! We cut several squares from the new material to
cover all the holes and tears. We didn’t wash it first because we wanted the
shoes to look as if they had been purchased with bright new patches on them. We
found needles and thread and within an hour, we had – what appeared to us – new
tennis shoes!
We proudly wore
them to school the next day and the reaction was amazing. Kids liked them so
much that they immediately went home after school to sew patches on their brand
new tennis shoes, just so they would be “in” with what they thought was the
latest fad.
Life was great . . . until the shoes got dirty
. . . and we needed to wash them. We had not realized that when we washed the
old tennis shoes, the patches made of new material would shrink. And when they
shrank, they pulled away from the shoe, leaving us with worse holes than
before.
In today’s
Scripture, Jesus is explaining to His disciples that His new gift of grace
could not be covered with the old law of Moses, just as a new cloth could not
be sewn to an old one to replace a tear.
Jesus came to
give us brand new life in Him! He will never “patch over” the rough stuff in
our lives and hope that it holds; instead He brings us new life!
Jesus did not
come as an addition to what we believe. He IS what we need to believe! Yes, He
came to fulfill the Old Testament but He also came to free us from the old and
to cover us with the new: a life of love, mercy, forgiveness and grace that can
only be found in Him.
`Do you long for a life without
old holes and tears from the past? That is what Jesus offers you right this
minute. No patches needed.
Father, I thank you that you have replaced
my “old” life with a “new” one with Jesus that does not need to be patched. In
Jesus’ Name. Amen.
R.A.P. it up . . .
Reflect
- Do you
have things in your past that you don’t think can be covered by the grace
of Jesus?
- Why do
you believe that He will not extend you His mercy and grace?
Application
- Make a
list of the parts of your old self that come up from time to time in your
life.
- Beside
each item, write a Scripture that tells you Truth from Jesus and His
mercy, forgiveness and love.
Power Verses
- Matthew
9:16 (NIV) “No one sews a patch of unshrunk cloth on an old garment, for
the patch will pull away from the garment, making the tear worse.”
- John
3:5, 7 (NIV) “Jesus answered, “I tell you the truth, no one can enter the
kingdom of God unless he is born of water and the Spirit. You should not
be surprised at my saying, ‘You must be born again.’”
- II
Corinthians 5:17 (NIV) “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new
creation; the old has gone, the new has come!”
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